Hello and welcome to the Lost Medals Australia blog. On this blog I will tell the stories of our research and successes in returning lost medals to veterans of their families. I also hope that this blog will provide the best resource for understanding how to research Australian medals. If you need help please contacted me via email at

28 January 2018

Glyn
and I are often faced with complicated and involved family stories, concerning
the return of medals. Our approach has always been to respect the families
involved and their privacy.

The
return of Charlie’s medals came first from a newspaper advert that was passed
to me.

Thanks
go to Vivian who set out, at the request of her mother, to return the medals to
Charlie’s family and to Jenn who undertook the ‘quiet’ side of the research and
really deserves the credit for the return. All I can claim to is the sorting
out of a myriad of facts, some of which it transpired weren’t actually
‘factual’, that took me to Charlie’s family. In the end, the story of the
return wasn’t as complicated as the challenge of protecting the privacy of the
people involved.

03 January 2018

This is one of those cases that Bill and I wished happened far more often.
This one started this morning when I received the Anniversary of National Service Medal awarded to 5716964 GNR G L Burnett. It was sent to me by the Berowa (NSW) RSL Sub Branch having been forward from the NSW Police. I knew that this soldier was from WA by service number beginning with the number 5. The first search I did of the service number gave me the full name of Graeme Leslie Burnett. I went to Ancestry and from the 1980 electoral roll found that Graeme lived in the WA town of Collie. From there I moved to the White Pages and found a GL Burnett living at the same address as in 1980 and now I had his phone number.
Within a minute of starting this search I was speaking to Graeme's wife and was told that three years ago Graeme attended an Anzac Day service at The Entrance, NSW. That explains how the medal got handed in to the NSW Police.
Thanks to the Berowra RSL, the $550 annual Ancestry subscription and the White Pages, Graeme will soon get his medal back.
The returned medal tally is now 2195.